Dallas: Dallas Holocaust Museum

Dallas: Dallas Holocaust Museum

  • <p>Dallas Holocaust Museum</p> <p>A tall red brick building on a corner</p>
  • <p>Mike Jacobs, Holocaust survivor and founder of Dallas Holocaust Museum</p> <p>A man standing next to a wall with photographs</p>
  • <p>Train tracks leading to Auschwitz concentration camp</p> <p>Train tracks leading though a brick archway</p>
  • <p>A German train car on display at the Dallas Holocaust Museum</p> <p>Man wearing a headset with his hand on a wooden train car in a building</p>
  • <p>European Jews arrive by train at the entrance to Auschwitz concentration camp</p> <p>Group of people waiting near a train</p>
  • <p>Shoes collected at Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp now on display at the Dallas Holocaust Museum</p> <p>A pile of old shoes</p>
  • <p>Piles of shoes outside Dachau concentration camp</p> <p>: A large pile of shoes outside a building</p>
  • <p>Voices of concentration camp victims live on at the Dallas Holocaust Museum</p> <p>A sign that says “Though if be to die, we will fight…We will fight not for ourselves but for future generations... Although we will not survive to see it, our murderers will pay for their crimes after we are gone. And our deeds will live forever.” Izhak K</p>

Chronicling the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the most famous attempt by Jews to resist genocide at the hands of German troops, the museum contrasts the dramatic uprising with life in Dallas on that same day. Housed in downtown quarters, the museum uses historic photos and films, period artifacts and audio presentations to chronicle the holocaust.

Dallas Holocaust Museum

  • Hours: Monday – Friday, 9:30 a.m. – 5 p.m., Saturday – Sunday, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.
  • Admission: Adults: $10, Seniors/Students/Active Military: $8
  • 211 N. Record St., Dallas, TX
  • 214-741-7500
  • Visit Website